Robert
Heinlein’s “—All you Zombies—“ and “ By His Bootstraps” are considered classic
works of time travel fiction. Simplistic
to say the least, Heinlein drew some looping lines on a board, twisted and tweaked
a little here, waved a hand there, and converted the result into stories. Isaac Asimov’s The End of Eternity is likewise considered a classic of having the
power to move through time. More complex
line-drawing games with a humanist agenda, it nevertheless remains a feature of
its era while attempting to grasp beyond.
It’s David Gerrold’s 1973 The Man
Who Folded Himself that tops them.
An immensely humane and literary work of time travel, how it is not a
classic alongside Asimov and Heinlein is a testament to the legacy of science
fiction that has prevented it from being viewed with legitimacy from
without.
Rather
than producing a mere paper exercise, David Gerrold takes all the aspects of
time travel—grandfather paradoxes, multiple selves, alternate realities,
beginnings and ends of time, redoing regrettable decisions—and expands them
into a revelatory experience that begins with the personal and ends with the
universal. Part bildingsroman and part recognition of the human condition, The Man Who Folded Himself is a fine
example of when the genre is on point it can do things and say things that achieve
literary fiction.
Daniel
Eakins is a student in university when his uncle contacts him to reveal a
surprise: Daniel is worth millions. A
$2,000 a week allowance immediately allotted him on the condition he start
keeping a personal diary, it’s an even bigger surprise a few weeks later to
learn his uncle is dead and that he’d lied.
There is no money. The few
thousands he’d spent is the last of the inheritance. The one thing his uncle does bequeath him
though, is a time traveling belt. Complete with instructions for any sort of
travel Daniel could desire (time skimming, time stoppage, moving forward,
backward, and a myriad other functions), Daniel soon finds himself playing the
age-old genre game of snag a future newspaper and use it to bet on horse racing
in an attempt to fulfill the millions he’d thought he’d inherited from his
uncle but didn’t. But a strange thing
happens in the process: Daniel meets a future version of himself. Calling him
Don, the two collude on the scheme and seem to get rich. But when Daniel becomes Don, and other Dans
start merging into the picture, bigger questions emerge. Can Daniel find himself amongst the multiple
versions and parallel realities that emerge?
A Golden
Age conceit (the timebelt is as classic as science fiction can be)
transmogriphied into a strong work of post-modern fiction, The Man Who Folded Himself transcends genre to achieve humanist
status. Multiple selves and parallel
realities the palette with which Gerrold paints his story of “personal development and acceptance” as
From
Couch to Moon words it, the narrative is a deeply revelatory experience of
one man feeling out his orientation to others, what he desires from life, and
how he copes with aging. Gerrold in fact
baring his soul in the book, the result is an emotionally powerful story that
on one hand gives the reader a feeling of complete satisfaction upon completion,
while on the other makes them ask and answer significant questions regarding
relationships, love, family, old age, and homosexuality.
The
meaning of the title can thus be interepreted a couple different ways. Folding an activity that can be done once to
create two halves, Daniel’s discovering his homosexuality creates two men where
there was only one. Folding an activity
that can be done more than once, for example origami, Daniel’s exploration of
his inner selves creates a jewel of self that must be seen reckoned with to
achieve understanding. But that the Man is the agent of folding, not an
outside force, is where the title takes its fullest meaning. Daniel may begin the narrative dependent on
others, but he moves and ascertains, observes and adapts to find the life most
suitable and desirable for himself—the orchestrator of his own fate as much as
is possible. Not an island battered by
ocean, rather a fish swimming in it, the overall movement of the story is
captured in its title is just superb.
Excluding
the predictably pompous introduction from the ever self-promoting Robert J.
Sawyer, the other issue with the 2003 reissue of The Man Who Folded Himself is that certain parts were revised to
meet with modern times. For example, at
one point Daniel invests in corporations which didn’t exist in 1973, begging
the question: will the novel be updated again in a couple of decades to meet
the times, and then again in a couple more, and a couple more? Serving no purpose, the original dates,
events, and business situations would have been equally as effective. The afterword to the edition, however,
supplied by Gerrold himself, is stunning.
Fully complimenting the text, it adds a plea that should be heard amongst
a wider audience.*
In the
end, The Man Who Folded Himself is a
powerful, personal narrative of one man searching for self and meaning in life,
and finding it. The answers are not
always concrete, but on balance satisfy his needs, and enable moving forward
with grace and gratification for what he does have. Speaking to a wider variety of topics, it is
a politicized text aiming at the realities of homosexuality, as idealistic and
painful as they are. The impasse Daniel
finds himself in (wanting children but unable to have them naturally), for
example, really digs at the conscience.
Never playing the pity card, however, Gerrold presents a story that is
more convincing for it. Time travel the
perfect symbolism for the main character’s journeys, it leaves one wondering
why stories which use the trope for more superficial purposes are championed
instead…
*That
plea: certainly homosexuality and gay marriage are contentious subjects,
particularly in the enclaves of traditionalism in the US. Adoption by gay couples an even more
troublesome topic, conservatives cling to their aged notions of what
constitutes family while liberals are open to the idea. Gerrold is not as bold as me in making such
statements, but he does touch upon the idea that gay couples have a lot of love
to give, yet are legally not allowed to adopt in most places. Innumerable children waiting for years and
years in foster care and orphanages for new homes, Gerrold asks: why not let
homosexuals adopt? They can’t be any
worse than most of such children's straight parents.
Glad you loved it as much as I did. It's my favorite time travel tale so far and I'm still amazed at how Gerrold made the story so neat and compact, yet so wormy and complex. I thought it was brilliant.
ReplyDelete